Standards and Financial Statements

Accounting Policies and Notes: How to Write Disclosures that Protect the Company and Clarify the Picture?

Financial reporting: Notes to the Financial Statements (illustration)
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Standards & Disclosure Notes + Policies + Examples

Accounting Policies and Notes: How to Write Strong Financial Disclosures?

Many focus on the numbers and forget that Notes to Financial Statements are what “explain the numbers” and transform statements from silent tables into an understandable story. In this guide, you will learn the difference between Accounting Policies and Financial Disclosures, and how to build organized Notes to Financial Statements that protect the company and facilitate the work of the reader and auditor.

Notes to Financial Statements: Guide to writing strong disclosures and linking them to numbers and policies
Notes to the statements are not a “cosmetic addition” — they are the part that clarifies what lies behind each number.
What will you gain from this article?
  • Clear understanding of Notes to Financial Statements and what they must include.
  • A practical structure for writing the notes memorandum without generic “copy and paste”.
  • How to link every material number in the statements to a clear note number (Cross-referencing).
  • A list of common mistakes that cause audit observations even if the numbers are correct.
Preparing Financial Statements per IAS 1: Structure, Presentation, and Disclosure
This article focuses on the Notes, while the foundational guide explains the framework for preparing and presenting the statements as a whole (IAS 1).

1) What are Notes to Financial Statements?

Notes to Financial Statements are the section that explains the details of the statements and how the presented numbers were reached. They are not an “optional appendix”; rather, they are part of the statements themselves. Imagine seeing a line item like “Inventory = 12,500” — the number alone does not answer questions like: How was inventory valued? Are there damaged goods? Is there stock held by third parties? Here comes the value of Financial Disclosures.

Simple Rule: Every material number in the statements must have a “short story” in the notes: policy + details + risks/obligations + comparison.

2) Who reads disclosures and why?

If you write notes with the logic of “Auditor only”, they lose value. If you write them with the logic of “Non-specialist reader only”, they may lose accuracy. It is best to address multiple readers at the same time.

Who reads Notes and what do they look for?
The Reader What matters to them in the Notes? Example of a practical question
Investors/Owners Risks, obligations, quality of earnings, judgments, and estimates. Is profit backed by cash flows? Are there hidden liabilities?
Banks/Lenders Covenants and guarantees, debt maturities, liquidity, influential policies. Are there Covenants? What are the loan terms?
The Auditor Compliance with standards, consistency, completeness, and linking statements to notes. Do disclosures reflect reality or generic texts?
Management Explaining performance indicators and causes of material changes. Why did inventory rise? Why did the revenue recognition policy change?
Important complementary point: When designing notes, first review the format of the statements—especially the Statement of Financial Position because it is the gateway to most notes. Balance Sheet Mistakes: How to Detect and Correct Them Before Closing?

3) Accounting Policies vs Notes: Practical Difference That Saves Time

The word “Policies” is sometimes used as a synonym for Notes, but practically there is an important difference: Accounting Policies explain the “logic of measurement and recognition,” while Notes explain “details and supporting explanation for numbers.” Policies are often written as a section within the Notes memorandum.

Accounting Policies or Notes?
Element Accounting Policies Notes
Goal Explain “How” recognition, measurement, and presentation were done. Explain “What the number consists of” + details + risks/obligations.
Content Form Clear and specific texts for a specific company. Text + Tables (movements/aging/classifications) + Cross-references.
Examples Inventory valuation, Revenue recognition, Depreciation. Inventory details, Asset movement, Liability maturities, Related parties.
Quality Rule: If the policy does not mention the company’s reality (e.g., “We value inventory at cost or net realizable value, whichever is lower” without details), it is often Boilerplate and needs customization.

4) Golden Rules for Writing Strong Disclosures

To make Financial Disclosures truly useful, focus on 6 practical rules:

4.1 Materiality Above All

Do not drown the reader with dozens of pages about immaterial items, and do not neglect a material disclosure because it is “complex”. Always start with the question: What might affect the decision of the statement user?

4.2 Write for the Reader: Clear Language + Precise Terminology

Clear text does not mean superficial text. Use a quick definition when needed, and standardize terms within the report. If your team struggles with terminology differences, a unified terminology reference helps a lot.

Download PDF of Unified Accounting Terms Glossary for Statements and Notes
Useful for standardizing terms when writing notes, especially when more than one person participates in preparing the report.

4.3 Consistency of Policies Across Periods + Disclosure Upon Change

Change may be legitimate, but the problem lies in non-disclosure or failure to explain the impact. Any change in a key policy deserves: Reason for change + Impact + Comparability.

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4.4 Link Every Material Number to a Note Number (Cross-referencing)

The reader does not want to search. Place the note number next to the item inside the statements, and inside the note place a reference to the statement and item. In this way, statement details become traceable at first glance.

4.5 Avoid “Ready-made” Texts Unrelated to Reality

The biggest cause of weak Notes is copying generic texts that do not reflect the company’s activity, risks, or contracts. The auditor often picks this up quickly and requests redrafting.

4.6 Don’t Write Alone: Review with Operations/Tax/Legal

Many disclosures (obligations, covenants, lawsuits, contracts) do not come from accounting alone. Set a clear information gathering path from relevant departments before closing.

Interim Financial Reporting: What differs from Annual Statements? (IAS 34)
The same disclosure philosophy applies to interim reports but in a “condensed” form according to the nature of the period.

5) Practical Structure for Notes (Notes Template)

This is a practical structure often used in preparing Notes to Financial Statements, and can be adapted according to the company’s size and nature. The Key: Logical order + same sequence of items appearing in the statements.

Proposed Notes Structure (Can be modified)
Section What does it include? Quick Quality Indicator
A) General Information Company activity, legal structure, currency, period, and reference for statement preparation. Can the reader understand the company’s activity in 30 seconds?
B) Basis of Preparation + Accounting Policies Standards framework (IFRS/…), accrual basis, key policies (revenue, inventory, assets, loans…). Is the policy “specific to your company” or generic text?
C) Material Judgments and Estimates Areas of judgment: receivable aging, asset impairment, provisions, assumptions… Did you mention what might change results if the assumption changes?
D) Item Notes per Statements Every material item in statements with: details + tables + movement + comparison + note number. Can the reader trace the number from statement to note and vice versa?
E) Special Disclosures Related parties, covenants and obligations, subsequent events, risk management, segments… as needed. Has information been gathered from relevant departments and reviewed?
If you want to apply the structure quickly: Use the Notes template (Word) with the ready-to-approve Statements template to standardize format and language.
Standard Note: Exact details may vary depending on the applied framework (IFRS/IFRS for SMEs/Local requirements). When implementing for an existing company, review your country’s requirements and company policies.

6) Linking Statements to Notes (Cross-referencing) — SVG Diagram

The goal of linking isn’t “report beautification”, but reducing time wasted searching, and reducing inconsistency errors between statements and note text. The following diagram illustrates the reader’s journey from the number to details and back to the statement.

Linking Statements and Notes Flowchart showing the reader’s transition from an item in the statement to a note number, then details, and returning to the statement. The Number’s Journey: Statement to Note & Back (1) Financial Statements Item + Number + (Note Reference) (2) Note Number Note 12 / Note 18 … as per numbering (3) Policy + Definition How was it measured/recognized? Standards + Material Assumptions (4) Supporting Details Movement tables/Aging/Classifications Risks/Obligations/Comparisons (5) Return to Statements with Confidence Reader understood the number + Can compare periods
The clearer the link, the fewer questions from the reader and auditor, and the more understandable and comparable the report becomes.
Quick Application: Place the note number next to every material item in the statements, and inside the note always start with the sentence: “This note relates to item X in statement Y”.

7) Practical Examples of Note Tables

The best note is one that balances “short text” and “clear table”. Here are common examples you can adapt for your company.

7.1 Example: Fixed Assets Movement (Property, Plant, and Equipment)

Simplified example of Fixed Assets Movement during the period
Item Beginning Cost Additions Disposals Ending Cost
Equipment 120,000 35,000 (5,000) 150,000
Furniture 40,000 8,000 48,000
Simplified example of Accumulated Depreciation Movement during the period
Item Beg. Accumulated Dep. Period Depreciation Disposals End. Accumulated Dep.
Equipment 45,000 12,000 (2,000) 55,000
Furniture 16,000 4,500 20,500
Quality Indicator: If the asset item in the Statement of Financial Position is a single number, the movement table explains “Why did it change?” without extra questions.

7.2 Example: Accounts Receivable Aging (Briefly)

Simplified example of Accounts Receivable Aging
Category Balance Disclosure Note
Current (0–30 days) 1,250,000 Relatively low risk
Overdue (31–90 days) 310,000 Subject to collection follow-up
Overdue (> 90 days) 95,000 Provision made per company policy

7.3 Example: Lease Contract Disclosures

Lease contracts are among the items requiring organized financial disclosures (especially when applying requirements like IFRS 16). If you have more than one contract, you will usually need tables and consolidated aggregations instead of writing scattered texts.

Download IFRS 16 Disclosure Pack (Leases) ready for Financial Statements
The pack helps you standardize disclosure tables and avoid data shortages during review.

8) Common Mistakes in Notes That Make the Auditor “Stop”

These are errors that occur frequently, affecting report quality and trust—even if the numbers are correct:

  • Conflict between Statements and Notes: Different number or classification without explanation.
  • Generic uncustomized policies: Text from another company that does not reflect your activity.
  • Absence of Comparisons: Numbers without prior period comparison, or comparison without explaining material changes.
  • Failure to mention Material Judgments: Key estimates without explaining inputs/sensitivity.
  • Illogical Numbering: Notes not ordered with the sequence of statements, making tracing difficult.
  • Overwhelming the Reader: Long pages about immaterial items vs two lines about material items.
Audit Hint: Make every note start with a line “This note relates to item…” then present concise tables, followed by explanatory text if a major change occurred from the previous year.

9) Checklist Before Approval + Ready Tools

Before issuing statements, schedule a final review session for notes just like the numbers review. Here is a practical checklist (short but effective):

  1. Does every material item in the statements have a clear note number?
  2. Does note numbering follow the order of items appearing in the statements?
  3. Are accounting policies “customized” and explain what the company actually applies?
  4. Are there comparative figures for the previous period + explanation for material changes?
  5. Have disclosures for obligations/covenants/lawsuits been gathered from relevant departments?
  6. Has a final review and Sign-off been conducted before approval?
Use the Disclosure Checklist to ensure “completeness” of requirements, then the Final Sign-off list to set responsibilities before issuing the report.

10) Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Are Notes to Financial Statements part of the statements or a separate appendix?

They are part of the financial statements. Their goal is to interpret numbers, policies, estimates, and supporting details, so they are not treated as a secondary file.

What is the appropriate number of pages for Notes?

There is no fixed number. The standard is Materiality: sufficient disclosures to clarify material items without drowning the reader in immaterial details.

Can I copy ready-made accounting policies and then modify them?

You can as a start, but they must be customized to reflect the company’s reality (contracts, measurement methods, exceptions). Generic text without customization often causes audit observations.

What is the most important thing an auditor looks for inside the Notes?

Consistency between statements and notes, completeness of material disclosures, clarity of policies, and explanation of significant judgments and estimates.

How do I make Notes “readable” for non-accountants?

Use clear headings, short sentences, concise tables, and quick definitions of terms when needed, while maintaining standard accuracy.

11) Conclusion

Writing Notes to Financial Statements is not a formality: it shows the company’s commitment, interprets numbers, and reduces risks. Start with a clear structure, customize policies to express the company’s reality, link statements to notes, then execute a final review with a checklist.

Your Next Step: Take your latest statements, choose 5 material items (e.g., receivables/inventory/assets/loans/revenue), then write for each item: short policy + details table + explanatory comment on changes. You will notice a significant difference in report quality within one week.

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